1 / 43

Training General Surgeons for Tomorrow

Training General Surgeons for Tomorrow. Thomas V Whalen, MD. Predictions are Difficult…. “The future ain’t what it used to be.”. New and Old Technologies. Ulcer Surgery Bariatrics Breast conservation Hernia Watch and Wait NOTES Interventional Radiology Telerobotics.

bernad
Download Presentation

Training General Surgeons for Tomorrow

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Training General Surgeons for Tomorrow Thomas V Whalen, MD

  2. Predictions are Difficult… • “The future ain’t what it used to be.”

  3. New and Old Technologies • Ulcer Surgery • Bariatrics • Breast conservation • Hernia Watch and Wait • NOTES • Interventional Radiology • Telerobotics

  4. AAMC Workforce Policy: 2006 • Twelve point policy • Called for a 30% Increase in US Allopathic Graduates • BBA of 1997 and the GME cap • Medicare GME funding and service versus education

  5. Lifestyle Issues • Only 46.5% of US Medical graduates plan to engage in full time practice • Impact of the female Physician Workforce

  6. Regionalized Acute Care Surgery • On call crisis in urban areas • Need for a multi-talented specialist who is available at all times • Possible synergies with Rural Surgery

  7. Current Workforce

  8. AAMC Projections to 2025

  9. AAMC Projection: Most Plausible

  10. AAMC Projection: Worst Case

  11. By Specialty

  12. Nurse Practitioners • All new NPs as of 2015 must be DNPs • CACC: Council for the Advancement of Comprehensive Care • NBME: “the exam will utilize test items previously used in the USMLE Step 3 examination”

  13. Solutions • Even a robust expansion of GME capacity (from 25,000 new entrants per year to 32,000) would only reduce the projected shortage in 2025 by 54,000 physicians (43 %).

  14. Definition of General Surgery • In Manhattan • In Willcox, Arizona • In Iraq and Afghanistan • And as cited by Claude Organ, • Friday night at midnight and Monday at Noon

  15. Production • Programs: 249 • Graduates: 1050 • Specialization: 79% • Some continue as General Surgeons • Number of Surgeons Certified: • 1980: 945 • 2008: 972

  16. Demand • 7.53 per 100,000 population • Maryland, Statewide: 5.2 • Far fewer in remote areas where they are most needed

  17. Willcox, AZ

  18. Retirement • Was decreasing… • The Economy

  19. Surgical Workforce • GMENAC Study (1971): All of Surgery except Otolaryngology deemed in surplus • SOSSUS (1975): Concluded that the existing number of surgeons was sufficient to provide needed services • Did highlight maldistribution • AMA CLRPD (1989): General Surgical Shortage by 2000 predicted

  20. Surgical Workforce • Number of General Surgery Training Programs Flat (249) • Production of those Programs Flat (1000)

  21. Dartmouth Atlas: 1996 to 2006 • Number of General Surgeons declined 16.3%

  22. Bureau of Health Professions • From 2005 to 2020: • Surgeons overall will increase 3% • General Surgery will decrease 7%

  23. AAMC Center for Workforce • General Surgeons < 55 YO: 42% • FP: 37% and Internal Med: 32%

  24. Rural General Surgery • Over 50 Million of our US Citizenry • Greater on call demands • Lower reimbursement

  25. US Medical Graduates • Five specialties have more applicants than positions: • Plastic Surgery • General Surgery • Dermatology • Orthopedic Surgery • Radiation Oncology

  26. Resident Attrition • Approaching 30% • The Best and the Brightest: “Academically highly qualified graduates and graduates who chose training in general surgery or in a 5-year surgical specialty were at increased risk of attrition during GME.”

  27. IMGs • Constitute 25% of the nation’s Physicians • Many from other countries are the “best and the brightest” • Twenty percent of Categorical General Surgery Residents are IMGs • A transgression of Distributive Justice in the World

  28. Ohio State Study • Assumes that 85% of certified surgeons will practice general surgery and 705 will annually retire • Restricts analysis to allopathic production • Static Assumptions as to disease demand

  29. Ohio State Study • Projects shortage of 1300 in 2010 • Grows to 6000 in 2050 • Proportionate to population, General Surgeons decreased 25% from 1981 to 2005

  30. Ohio State Study – Comments • Hiram Polk: “The pundits on the East and West Coasts don’t have a clue…” • Polk: “…we ought to open (a) thousand slots” at good programs • Resident comment on remuneration and lifestyle

  31. The RRC • The ACGME • Nominating Organizations • ABS • ACS • AMA-CME

  32. What the RRC Does • Program Review and Accreditation • Citations • Cycle Length • Requirements for Training • Additional Rural Surgery elements?? • Coordination with the ABS • General, Pediatric, Vascular, Surgical Critical Care (Hand)

  33. What the RRC Does NOT Do • Set Production Quotas • Certify Individuals

  34. Current RRC Issues • Milestones • Duty Hours • Accelerated Visits • Preliminary Residents • Essential Content Area Experience • International Rotations • Seventh Competency • Fellowship Minimum Pass Rates

  35. International Rotations • Non-Chief rotation up to six months • Faculty members from the parent program or equivalently-trained host faculty • Clearly state educational rationale • Appropriate educational environment • Appropriate supervision • Educational resources

  36. The ACGME and the RRC • New Leadership • New model of the CRCC and the ACGME Board

  37. What Else Can Be Done? • GME Funding • General Surgery as Surgical Primary Care • Title VII Health Professions Program • Alleviate Medical School Debt Burden • Extend Loan Deferment

  38. Conclusion • There is little question that there is a shortage of general surgeons • The shortage will worsen • The dynamic environment makes planning difficult • The pipeline is long • General Surgeons have job security • The RRC stands ready to approve appropriate additional positions and programs

  39. Questions??

More Related